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Self-Assembled Molecular Nanowires for High-Performance Organic Transistors
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![]() | Accepted version | 2.4 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Title: | Self-Assembled Molecular Nanowires for High-Performance Organic Transistors |
Authors: | Fleet, LR Stott, J Villis, B Din, S Serri, M Aeppli, G Heutz, S Nathan, A |
Item Type: | Journal Article |
Abstract: | While organic semiconductors provide tantalizing possibilities for low-cost, light-weight, flexible electronic devices, their current use in transistors—the fundamental building block—is rather limited as their speed and reliability are not competitive with those of their inorganic counterparts and are simply too poor for many practical applications. Through self-assembly, highly ordered nanostructures can be prepared that have more competitive transport characteristics; however, no simple, scalable method has been discovered that can produce devices on the basis of such nanostructures. Here, we show how transistors of self-assembled molecular nanowires can be fabricated using a scalable, gradient sublimation technique, which have dramatically improved characteristics compared to those of their thin-film counterparts, both in terms of performance and stability. Nanowire devices based on copper phthalocyanine have been fabricated with threshold voltages as low as −2.1 V, high on/off ratios of 105, small subthreshold swings of 0.9 V/decade, and mobilities of 0.6 cm2/V s, and lower trap energies as deduced from temperature-dependent properties, in line with leading organic semiconductors involving more complex fabrication. High-performance transistors manufactured using our scalable deposition technique, compatible with flexible substrates, could enable integrated all-organic chips implementing conventional as well as neuromorphic computation and combining sensors, logic, data storage, drivers, and displays. |
Issue Date: | 21-Jun-2017 |
Date of Acceptance: | 21-Jun-2017 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/50530 |
DOI: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b01449 |
ISSN: | 1944-8244 |
Publisher: | American Chemical Society |
Start Page: | 20686 |
End Page: | 20695 |
Journal / Book Title: | ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces |
Volume: | 9 |
Issue: | 24 |
Copyright Statement: | This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b01449 |
Keywords: | Science & Technology Technology Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Science & Technology - Other Topics Materials Science nanowire transistor phthalocyanine organic electronics stability mobility temperature dependence image analysis neuromorphic computing random networks FIELD-EFFECT TRANSISTORS THIN-FILM TRANSISTORS SINGLE-CRYSTAL NANOWIRES COPPER-PHTHALOCYANINE METAL PHTHALOCYANINES TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURE EFFECT MOBILITY HOLE MOBILITY TRANSPORT 0904 Chemical Engineering 0303 Macromolecular And Materials Chemistry 0306 Physical Chemistry (Incl. Structural) |
Publication Status: | Published |
Appears in Collections: | Materials Faculty of Natural Sciences Faculty of Engineering |